Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Friday, August 29, 2008
Upon returning home from my trip to Chicago I found an invitation from Preservation Chicago (I am a member) inviting me to attend the 2008 Preservation Celebration on September 26 at The Marmon Grand located in the Motor Row Historic District. There will be live blues, a silent auction, and Motor Row mini tours. This Spanish revival style building by architect Alfred Alschuler was built in 1922 and has recently been restored and reconstructed. Motor row is the nation's largest early automobile row and was added to Chicago's Landmark District in December 2000. This area of South Loop is slowly being revitalized. It's wonderful to see restoration of buildings that still exist.
I spent the weekend of August 23 and 24 in Chicago at my daughter's townhouse on Calumet Parkway, the street behind historic Prairie Avenue. After reading an article a couple of months ago, I have become obsessed with old water tanks so I decided to take digital photos of any I could find in South Loop. My trek took me to Cermac and the Motor Row Historic District. As I walked around the area, water tanks seemed to appear everywhere, somehow missed in my earlier jaunts around that part of the city. I snapped quite a few pictures and have been researching further about these iconic structures that are slowly being lost to urban sprawl modernization.
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
National Historic Perservation Act
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Wheeler Kohn Mansion
Tucked away on Calumet Avenue in the Historic Prairie Avenue District is the Wheeler-Kohn Mansion. I stumbled across this hideaway while speed walking one morning. Passing the Army National Guard Chicago armory and some newly built townhouses, the mansion suddenly appeared, existing since 1870, so out of place in the 21st century. I stopped dead. I couldn't believe the house was still there. It was truly breathtaking! Designated a Chicago Landmark on February 5, 1998 the Wheeler-Kohn Mansion is now a bed and breakfast owned by Historic Real Estate. Boasting over 10,000 square feet of usable space, the old house has quite a history dating back to before the Great Chicago Fire. It once was occupied by a publishing company and a distribution warehouse before it was purchased by its current owner in 1997. Calvin T. Wheeler, former banker and President of the Chicago Board of Trade, recruited Otis Wheelock to design the Second Empire style home in the mid-1880's. This is truly a treasure sitting in the midst of Chicago, the architectural giant of the world. Anyone visiting Chicago should take time to visit or spend a night at the mansion at 2018 S. Calument Avenue.
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Chicago Harbor Lighthouse
Thursday, June 12, 2008
Prairie Avenue Bookshop
I had a chance to visit the Prairie Avenue Bookshop located at 418 South Wabash in the heart of downtown Chicago. It has quite an interesting history stemming back to 1961. Marilyn and Wilbert Hasbrouck founded a quarterly journal, the Prairie School Press. In 1964, they established the Prairie School Review which was devoted to scholarly treatment of American's only indigenous modern architecture. Out of these two publications, the Prairie Avenue Bookshop opened in the Keith House at 1900 Prairie Avenue (pictured above) in 1974. In 1978 the bookstore out grew its lodgings and it moved to South Dearborn street Printer's Row where it too grew in such volume that in 1995 it relocated to its current venue that has six times more space than South Dearborn Street.
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
Indiana Flats Building
People familiar with the Cermak Road and Indiana Avenue area may remember the three-story building called Indiana Flats. Built in 1895 and once home to Frank Lowden (governor) and his then-fiancee Frances Pullman (daughter of railroad magnate George M. Pullman) this dwelling succumbed to the city's redevelopment and was razed. Preservation Chicago envisioned the rehabilitated building as a historical entry way for tourists and guests traveling to McCormick Place Convention Center and an example of 19th Century architecture. What's worse to see, a big crane demolishing the building from one end to the other, or a group of salvaging scrappers pulling pieces of copper, cornices, and ornaments from its exterior, eradicating the 109 year old property's historical value. The picture below is what the property looks like now. Either way, another piece of Chicago's history is lost. Immediately west on the same city block is the former site of the Lexington Hotel, once home to Al Capone. It's amazing how large Chicago is but yet so much history can be found on any street corner.
Thursday, June 5, 2008
2016 Olympics
Monday, June 2, 2008
Michigan Avenue Streetwall
Friday, May 30, 2008
Prairie Avenue
For history buffs like me who love old architecture and are fascinated by the people that once lived in these buildings there is a wonderful area in South Loop that has been reborn. Designated a Chicago Landmark on December 27, 1979 the Prairie Avenue District located about two miles from downtown Chicago, is truly a historical area. What makes it so unique after all these years is its rebirth. Once an area known for its opulence and considered Chicago’s most fashionable residential street, it also experienced years of steady decline and was home to vice, scandal, and crime. Now, less than 100 years later, its character has come full circle through the mansions that grace its street. On-going construction has revived this area and made it one of the most highly sought after neighborhoods in which to live. In doing so, Prairie Avenue has been re-designed to incorporate new with the old. The handful of existing restored mansions, built over 100 years ago, costing over $200,000, now stand along side grand new homes costing millions of dollars. Some of the famous people who helped make Prairie Avenue a historical venue worth remembering are Marshall Field, Philip Armour, George M. Pullman, Joseph Sears, William Wallace Kimble, and Fernando Jones, to name a few.
Friday, May 23, 2008
Chicago's newest landmarks
Gravity-fed rooftop water tanks are among Chicago's newest landmarks. When Chicago rebuilt after the 1871 fire, rooftop tanks were considered a practical addition to prevent widespread damage to the city if another devastating fire occurred. But by the 1990's thousands of tanks had been demolished severing the history of the way people were tied to these tanks. Currently there are only 178 tanks remaining, 91 of which are still operating. Ronald Carlson of Johnson & Carlson, 3312 W. 111th Street, has studied these tanks and knows how to service them as well. Many of us who grew up in Chicago remember these magical tanks that often advertised companies' wares. It's sad to see them slowly disappear.
Thursday, May 22, 2008
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
I recently reviewed The Complete Public Enemy Almanac by William J. Helmer and Rick Mattix for ReaderViews. This beautifully bound 889 page hardcopy book is a must have for any person interested in true-crime. Chock full of gangster and outlaw events of the 1920’s to 1940’s era, the authors have succeeded in presenting in chronological order, many little know facts that occurred in what they call the golden age of crime. The book may be a little daunting with its dialogue and graphic pictures, but it gives the reader a true sense of how life in
Each of the seven chapters is filled with nuggets of factual information that has been researched and documented by the authors. Besides just telling about the events that took place during this era, the authors provide in-depth information about the evolution of official police departments, passage of amendments, inception of cooperative crime control, and the development of criminal identification in crime detection laboratories in
An entire chapter is devoted to “quotable quotes.” You can read about Al Capone’s colorful remark about prohibition in which he says “When I sell liquor, they call it bootlegging. When my patrons serve it on silver trays on